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; ) : | i ¥ 2 SEEING — — [ WOWAK SAVES POISONED WO MISS JEANNETTE MAN W SUMBY She Passed as “Nellie Myrtle,” ard Was Taken Dying fro ma Resort on Thir- ty-fiftth Street After Pawning Some Fine Jewels Said to Have Been Stolen. '; ‘The girl who was taken in a cab to Roosevelt Hospital last night r the name of Nettie Myrtle, and who Gied an hour later of opium poisoning, ig Jeanette Somby. who until March % lived at the home of John Strohsbel No, St ost Kinney strect, Newark ‘Migs Somby had been separated from’ her relatives for about four Years, and had been @ boon companion of Mamie Melando, who figured promi- nently in the Roland Molineux It was the Melando woman's jewelry that the Somby girl had in her posses- sion when she went to the “Little Sa- voy," a resort on West Thirty-ftth street, and which she pawned to keep up her debauch. Miss Somby tool up her residence at the Hast Kinney sirect house on Sept. 10last, It tp sald that ber mother dis- owned her because of her habits. Yesterday afiernoon she telephoned from this city to Strohsbe! that her clothing had been taken from her and sked him to bring some of her belong: ings that had been left tn her room. lle did so. Strohbel admits that he ts the "Jack" she ja sal@ to have mentioned In her delirium. A-c&b took the woman and “Jack"’ to it night, and as the man ¥ tu the doetors he exid: Auxionn to Get Away: Nellle Myrtle, of No. Newark, She disap ‘oman { “This 1, Elm street. peared from home four days ago. and T have just succeeded In finding her.” The Little Savoy. from which she was! talvan to the hospital, is a hotel In West Thirty-fitth street, near Eighth ave- nye, kept by a negro named Barron Witkina. Tr is there that shé took, or was «iven, the fatal dose of opium. Sold Valuable Jewelry, Wiikin. said that the woman appeared at his place on March 24, a week ago Thursday last, accompanied by Larry Esquire, a negro, for whom the police fare searching. She engaged the very best apart- ments—a sult on the parlor floor, ° Her disnlav of jowelry, her excellent elotl- ing and her actions naturally. occasioned comment in the surroundings in which she had placed herself. She drank much wine, ordeped the choicest food and paid her bills from day to day, procuring funds by pawn- ing her jewelry in a loan office in Highth avenue, She kept herself in a constant supply of money, and at dif- ferent times disposed of a large di mond sunburst, two diamond brooche: fa solitaire diamond ring and five clus- ter rings, all value. It was on Thursday last that the negro Esquire jeft "The Little Savoy. and Jater on the same day that tw men and a woman drove to the hotel in a eab and took the young woman's clothing and what remained of her Jewelry, ‘They left her not enough to dress herself for the street. aid She Was a Thiet. | As the strange trio left the place Wilkins says they told him his pretty blond lodger was a thief and that all | the fine things she possessed had been stolen. | Tt was early vesterday morning when | A man asked for Nellie Myrtle at the TAt Apartments, and she managed to bor: | row sufficient clothes t out walk: ing with Mm, When he left her it wos with OR promise thet he would return with clothing of her own, on after he bad | gone the girl ad mussenger boy toe drug ai ao far as the ice have een able | u rn, it was then that the poison which killed her was purchased. At 4 | o'cluck ane wae found uncppacious, and Wilkins summoned Dp. KR. C. Frazer of N Wee Thirty-Afth street, wii » chance in a thous avo. ~TWO FROM FIRE We Wition. Pics Picks Up Mrs, Alice Healy and Infant and ‘Carries Them to Place of | Safety. APhie the flames wrie ereeving Into her apartment on the fiftir tloor of the Dverstory” tenement No. WS Hast Seven- tleth atreat, Mrs. Wate Brincoe picked up her nieoe, Dra. Alice Healy, from the bed and wrapped: Her In blank She then packed her to tha Orewseape and with her.throg days old child carried her j to the adjoining: house. The re had started in the apart- mont of Mr. L. Fleming, on the floor below. It quickly ate Its way along the hall. and was burning Into the Brin- ope apartment when the sound of fre wag started through the houre, Mrs Healy had been confined but a few ays ago and is in a serious condition Made for the ¥ Mrs. Briscoe raw that there wan no thme to loss, and she made for the fire- escape at the back of the house. With the mother and the child I+ her arms she crawled along the cv until she was safe within the shelter of No. 905. About titty persons were in the House ut the time the alarm was given, They) all got out safely, the tire-eseupes in the reay being used by thors on the fourtii and fith floors. The Fire Department, which arrived soon after the alarm was turned in, quickly eatingulshed the flames, The damage wan 62,600 On the way to the fire the ins rance Ninetleth street cuilided patrol of Es with a northbound Second avenue car At the corner of Sovyentietn street. ‘The driver of the ames Curtin, throwr from his but not seriously hurt. One of the horses. w. injured that it had to larry Miller, car, Was placed under arrest —— JIMINEZ AT ST. LOUIS. ST. THOMAS. Danish West Indies. April 2—Gen. Jiminez, former Presi- Jent of Santo Domingo and leader of a t revolution In. that flved here to-day from Yanto voiningo. —>$—_ SHIPPING NEWS. republic, ars Monte Cristi, wR TO-DAY ~ LIVELY BLAZE. IN resExcape, | was TRE “FLATIROW” | Fire on Tbanieth. Floor of the | Ta!l Skyscraper Causes Stam- pede Among Tenants of Up- per Floors. When T. 8 Winans, manager of the New York office of Whitehead & Hong, lold manufacturers, went-to Junch to-day he left a plece of celluloid on the Broadway wiydow of bia office on the twentleth floor of the Flatiron Building, Up that high the aun was beating tn \furtously through the window, Milas Edna D, Beach. the stenographer, was hammering away at a typewriter to make un time while the boas was out when she happened to look up and saw the cellulofa on fire in the window Rushing to another window, M Beach poked her blond pead out and eamed to the crowd below that there wasa fire up there, But she wa high tn the air and no one heard her. she ran out into and re screamed. | too | | s came out on that foor, rd for the stairs and elevators, and soon there was a stampede of the ten- | representing @ great | POISONING ARRESTS, Ida Moore, who hay recuy Jthe drug sumMclently to valk, adds to this ‘that she da certain Anite Owens Gd not (ry. to polson her, as she was jt near her ‘on Thursday evening When both were given the deadly mtuf. Deputy Coroner Brown, who | eonally conducted the Inventis i nto the death of Ant {Louis Heineman, Who Never THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 2; 1904. aad . —— v9 . JEANNETTE SOMBY, WHO DIED OF POISON: AFTER SHE HAD DISPOSED OF MANY VERY VALUABLE JEWELS anne POPDOLIOODOODEL E445 Dd: HISLDLE HH DDSED HE HEGEL 1909 DEBOE CL DOESOOOESOCOOSOO9EO if $ BUT MYSTERY DEEP: Police Unable to Learn How Two Girls Were Given Deadly Stuff Which nroved Fatal to One. Ing World) Pa, April 2—The polsoning of Annie Owens and Ida Moore here has not yet | heon solved. ‘The volice have arrested | five inen and two women who were With | th poinoned girls all evening, but thy have told nothing that helps the auth tal to WILKESBALR myatery of the ftles. ‘They all say the two girls were bitter rivals f Christopher Nolan, whom both knew, fat near them, and he says polson could not have t put dn the gliss of either without his seeing Mt red from. tis the most mys had and he ¢ to Mt. “AED HOOK PATRIOT DEAD AT AGE OF 104 find any solution of | Claimed Acquaintance Revolutionary Heroes, Passes “ats on many of the twenty-two fie srs to get out | Bo this. time considerable cectuioia | way on fre In room No, 20% and column of dense black smoke -was rolling our the window Miss Beach had | ope This attracted the crowds jn ro. and ‘Twenty-third etrect ani in Madison Square, the same crowds ‘which Mias Beach's frightened voice falled to reach. | Some one turned Ina fire alarm and | jaa the engines arrived the crowds | igrow larger, until Fifth avenue, Hroad. way, ‘Twenty-third street and ‘Twenty. second street were blocked and thou |fands were crowding back into Madi. 1) Sauiare Volunteers Quick to Act, Supt. Davis, of the Flatiron Building, uistering hin Volunteer Fine Brigade, compesed of the sidewalle sweep r vlevator starter and the fount, oor | | vorter, dashed up, the elevator shart, gi) reel of hose attached th ¢ hall, ii B teh, | a s tne he time the regular fir Away—Liked Good Liquor. Lovis Heineman, ‘the Fatriot of Red Hook.’ died this afternoon at the axe of one Wundred and four years, in dis home, at No. 680 Columbia street, Brooklyn ond being the character of that rectiog of South Rrookirn Known ted Hook.” Heineman’s prineipal ¢ Hinction was in the fact that hen H ver with claimed to have shaken hands Washington, He sald he iid net hear Washiugton’s farewell addrese to his army, nor was hea cosfdential adviser of anytaigner of the Declaration of Independence In the slgner's tater years, But Heineman was a patriot. Patriot- sm war his hobby He abso believed Hanor gach tte amoker » drinking a portion Jday. aod he was the Inveter of tobacco In a clay pipe Resides denying @ ny memor of Wash- ygion Heineman alwas tisiated thee ho as not a weather prophet r many | «he kept the old Beach Tavern. on Shore rod, but he balked grapi S45i80n son THE TSDES. stim Waser, Be ‘Anal ae We 1 A un rises. Moon rires 9.08 . 3 Hook. Ipiand. Ferry E PORT OF NEW YORK, ARRIVED. Wa Hamturs ppenagen | Havana anna ariesion Hantos Liverpoot RNG : Ha e-Port Arthur: dnmessin Vitoria’ ‘Luter renan INCONING 81" DLE TO-DAY tavena. Hofatl bra a. Coamo, Porto Havana Coamo, Porto Rien, Hava MBHIPS. RAILED wo-Dai Laverpoct "| ment, up to the twentieth floor with their lit. | {tle red fire extngulshers Supt Davie | fand his force had the fire under control {and in another few minutes had it out Tamage, $300, Chi Kor made a rurvey of the ° | nuliding and congratulated Miss Beach| o on giving the algwm $0 promptly, and Auniliary Fire Chief Davis on the ef: jwieney of hia Volunteer fre-Aghting Dvieade, “The real chief also f that the standpine system of the building Was excellent ——=_+— Fisher Rrow. New Store. The opening of their new establish- at One Hundred and Twenty-ffth j street, near Madison avenue, takes | place today, The entire butlding will be devoted to the carrying on of » | Lratcoue Lurnitudy aby corpet busines Vie asock embFacus the medium Wer as tne her grades of govds, [rom Vhich the most critical can be auited, Jrices at all Unies will be as low as and j often lower than prevail in downtown extablishments Furnishing complete outfits at a stute4 by denying that an man’ batter sberiff of Kings Count ever t his hotel proud of, and of the Ihynor he He also xold. gant Said there was never a had hts fill Amerie in eyecethin Heineman became known as the Herat Red Hook. Cntil a. week ago he had been around his old haunts, Thon he got A cold and "pneumonia ret in eB S| EXPLOSION JARRED CITY. Bollding Wrecked and Man Killed by Darsting of Alr Tank. MEADVILLE, Pa, April 2—-An alr tank alx by ten feat, exploded in the | machine shop of the Erin Railroad shops here to-day, partially wrecking the Im- mense building and killing one man {n- tly and {ijuring several. John de gang foreman, thirt Beven veats old, was the man killed, and those seriously Injured were Har! detectives watehing at luc Pats i MBEZILER IS CAUGHT IN PARIS Isaac Nebenzahl, Who Robhed New .York Company of $24,000, Captured by A. L. Drummond After Long Chase. A. TL. Drummond, formerly Chiet of | the United States Secret Service, cabled to-day from Parly to hia detective agenvy*in this city that be had cap- ured Inaae Nebenaghl, who has been af Ive from Justice on the continent since last May. Nebenzahl was treas- urer of the BxcelSor Shirt Company of this city and is wanted for the em- Doezlement of $24,000, Nebenzuhl was treasurer of the con- cern and on May he disappeared, going to St. Louly. de his way to Europe by way of Mexico. After his Alsappearance the firm falled and former Congressman Emerson, of Warrensburg, N. Y.. one of the prin cipal creditors, was appointed receiver. Mr. meron took it upon himself to yun down Nebenzahl and engaged the Drummond Detective Agency for the task Not until late in February did « this end gain a to the whereabouts of Nebengahl. Then they learned that he had written to his wife trom Berlin, Tails information was cabled to Mr, Drummond, who was then In Rome He went to Berlin and fund, ther Nebenzaiil had left on the Ist of Jan- uary, leaving no trali Followed Mim io Vienna, Mr. Drummond learned enough about hig man to lead to the belief that he had gone to Vienna, and to Vienna went the detective, ‘Tho frat day he was there he found that Nebensahl wa the business of manufacturing fur Jars and cuits for overcoats and th he bourded with Mrs. Mary Nobos, Nv. 10 Alser street He got the Vienna pol thes busy nd the next day a policeman to arrest But Nebenzah! had gonc, leaving word that his mail was to be forwarded to general delivery at the post-office in Paris, te at e author!~ went wilh Nebenzaht. found that Nebenzaht had gone to from Berlin and had atet From the ed him ty a sm. d him placed unde a Paris detective mm 91 mity hotel and survellh Hl the ne to be glad wh he was Tie” had “only” 390, which) he announced wan all the money he had in the world, Previous to hia disappearance from New York he told M mmond he had lost $190,000 in” Wall street Requisition papers have been pre- pared and in a few days Mr. Drum- mond will stare for New York with his prisone: ooo Wn Peterson He ms Wife of fef Machinint Nielsen, Chief Machinist at the Washington, was the most Pp [Navy Yard, elsen, Bcandinavian-American line steamer United States warp into her dock at Hol to-day, He was waiting for Miss Emma Peterson, of Endlave, Den- mark, the girl to whom he was be- frothed seven years ago. Miss Peterson was on board and one of the firet to land, Without losing any time the couple, accompanied by In. migration | Inspector McGregor « and Deputy Collector Von. Dreele, went the hime of Charles Mobantel. of No. 84 Dryden etreet, and were married Mr. and Mrs, Nellsen then left for Wanhington, where Mr. Nislven has tite ted out a home for his bride, After legving his native country Mr Nielsen ire to America and began work in the vy Yard. His. advancement Papi, and to-day he Isat the head of the meohanical department. ————— price Is specialized, an joutft at $115 1. f rooms displayed in show roome be- ly attraptive offering, ai Of the) goods Piece ve inducement and faro be had for the he real val plece would pte cffeed, an tre Cummings and Ernest H, Hausman, clerks in the general foreman’s office, and Capt. E. M. Hoffman, a machinist. ihe sir tank was carrying, s abowt one one hundred pounds pressure. soy Jarred the entire city, 4 work in the machine aera palre.are made, Suop ROOT SEES ROOSEVELT. WASHINGTON, _ April 2.—Ex-Secre- tary of War Elihu” Root. and Mrs. Root are guests of friends in Washington. Ee oot had a cont ent to-day, But 8 disclosed. f He was shown to her} COLESOESOSILESESEIELG MIE 18OSOO8IHTOORECOODDD SOLELOHESOOOOROOSOSOOSSES MERCHANT'S WIFE OBTAINS DIVORCE Wife of Charles L. Bucki Gets Decree Granted by Judge Keogh on the Report of Ref- eree Campbell. Supreme Court Justice Keogh, sit- Ung at Special ‘Term of the Supreme Court, at White Plains, to-day signed a decree granting a divorce to Mrs, Harriet 'T. Buckt, of Manhattan, from Charles GL, Buckl, a former rich lumber merchant of New York Clty, on the report of Referee Canfpbell, Justice Keogh several days ago held up the deeree pending an investigation as to the residence of the plaintif, but the lawyer for the plaintitt satisfed him on that point to-day. Judge Keogh told a reporter the rea- son ie id not sign the decree at first was becausa it-was eyldent that both parses were residents of Manhattan it as the referee was a lawyer In hi Justicia depariment he decided to the judgmen unset asked mo to seal papers,” said judge Keogh, “but that Is against my practice. MINISTER SCORED BY JUDGE IN COURT Suit by Church Members Against Pastor to Recover Commis- sions on Qil Stock Prompts Seathing Talk, WORCESTER, Mass., April 2-Judav Samuel Uticy, in the Central Diatrict Court, created a sensation to-day by denouncing in unmeasured terms th Rey. Roland A, Nichols, pastor of the Highland Street Chureh of Christ, in thin city, and members o fhis conare- gation, who had appeared in court to testify in a suit growing out of an au! stock venture of the Rev. Nichola, ‘The plaintiffs, who were Taemwet of the congregation, were suing Rev. Mr. Nichols for commission money alleged to have been withheld from them by Mr. Nichols. Judge Utley, in concluding his views on tha case, sald that he could scarcely tind words In which to express his dis- gust a¢ the whole transaction, He char- acterized (he oll stock deal as one of the worst schemes of dejiberate theft which had ever come to hfs attention. His finus Words Were a quotation trom the Seriptures: house shall .be culled ¢he House of Prayer, but ye have made Ita den of thieves.” Se ene HE BOUGHT STOLEN RING. Inaae Morrin Forced to Give Up Dinmend He Pald Fo When Isaac Morris bought a diamond ring worth $176 "from Arthur Marks two days aga he was proud of his purchase, His pride vanished in Centre Street Police Court to-day when he had to return the ring and found that Marks had spent the money, ‘The ring was one of two stolen from W._C. Spalding, a diamond merchant, at No, 6) Nassau street. b ger, Louls Laughtenberg. Youn, Man direnen cies’ RES ud the theft and gaid he hay C ee = I ound and a 4 to Morris for +5. ~ and Marks were his mes ee te veo sen mitt one of the rings to mare as ng the rin Paugntenh by the larate for Morsis was allowed to been stripped of his di Th WASHINGTON, April 2.—Samuel J. Kinsley, once manager of the National exami after be bad ‘Theatre here and well known in theatrl. paket SN cal clrel le : oe WILLARD'S WILL Mrs. Helen V. Bely D V. Bell, Daughter of Testator, Accuses Brother Oswald of Prejudicing Father Against Her:When She Wed, The legal contention between Mrs. Holen Villard Bell, of Germany, and her brother, Oswald Villard, over the ¢! tate of thelr father, the late Henry Villard, had @ round in Manhattan to- | day. Mrs. Bell received only a $25,000 ber | quest and an annuity of $6,000 from & | went to the wall, trust fund under her father’s will, ber brother receiving the rest. Ghe asserts that her father had trans- | Cefred valuable securities to her in 19%, but thet at his death, in 1896, she was unable to find the record of it. Sho also alleges that her father made a will, under which she would have fared muoh better than by the one probated ‘by her brother Oswald. Books Mast Be Produced, The case hae been on trial before Justice Keogh, of the Supreme Court t White Plains, and Justice Keogh signed the order upon which Gustav Ulbricht, who was Henry Villard's pri- vate secretary, was directed to appear with books, records and papers before ustice O'Gorman, of the Supreme Court, Manhattan, to-day, for examina- tion about the alleged transfer by Henry Villard to his daughter Helen of securities In 1894, Henry Villard was worth $40,000,000 at one time, but got into di ities and The magnificent pal- ace butt by him and occupying the whole block between Fiftieth and Fitty- | first streets, on Medison avenue, opposite | the archiepiscopal palace of Archbishop Farley and the rectory of Dr. Lavelle, was sold. D. Ogden Mills bought It and gave It to his daughter, Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, Left Fortune of $10,000,000, Henry Villard was down, but he did ngt stay down, and when ho died five years later he left @ fortune of about $10,000,000, it Is said. Oswald Villard's sister charges that he had arranged @ marriage for her to a titled European, and when she i!lus- trated she hall a will of her own, by re- pudigting this arrangement and clvow- ing her owyt husband, a talented young Irishman named Bell, Oswald set abut {uelilling @ prejudice against her ja hi mind and thus obtained his acquiescence in a will which eft her only @ tithe of her narural hare in her father’s millions. Secretary Ulbrecht sald that fourteen yeare prior to the death of Henry Vil- lard, In 1900, he kept all of Mr, Villard’s books, Including his private ledger Ulbricht gafd he remembered that on Tec. 2, 189, $49,000 Northern Pac} ts Vilinre were: sold for $47 9680, 4 Norlngen Pacine secona martes ctl, 10 were bought at a coat ot 3, Tiny whose order?" asked i weg aatSraes, taeda a uy oro Me. Villar Meine svaales rare mate Baitest un Hey) Gob 3h, 238 aed Northera anino were bousht ecam> er, Ulbricht says no changes were made in Miss VI Ca account subsequent to Nov. L. } in addition to the one he, had described. “Were twenty-six shares of Evenin, Post stock, at $600 a share, transterr from Miss Villard’s account to any one aRections atopned the answer t anda dozen succeeding question: hen the hearing was Lovable weal BROTHER FATALLY SCALDS HIS SISTER Overturns Teakettle, to Which He Had Attached String, and the Contents Horribly Burn’ Little Girl. Lena Germlio. five years old. living at No.” U7 Union street, Brooklyn, was gealded to death to-day by the ov turning of a kettle to which her broth- er hed tied a piece of string. The children were left alone in the kitchen. Tommy, four years old, saw the steam coming out of the kettle and jhe hit upon an idea of making tt a locomotive and a plece of string. which he had attached to the kettle, a train of cars. In the exeltement of the play Tommy ferked too heavily on the kettle and it oxerturned. Lena wes almost directly under the fal! of boiling water, Her face.and body were horribly scalded. ‘The cries of the child attracted the summoned a doctor, Nothing could be done for the child and she dled s00n after, MISSING BOY un, © RETURNS ROME Frances Flynn Begs fee Parents fore Police Magistrate at Long Island City. Pretty Frances Flynn, year-old daughter of Fireman James | | Flynn, of Engine Company No. 11, of | the Long Island City Fire Department, wept bitterly when arraigned before Magistrate Bmith, of the Long Island City Court, this morning and bezged to be permitted to go.back to Edward Mc- Nally, with whom she eloped last Sun- day and whom she says she married. Miss Fiynn or Mra. McNally, as she prefers to be called, is large for her yeard and has the appearance of a woman of twenty instead of a girl of sixteen. She worked as a stenographer in the office of the New York Manufac- turing Company at Long Island City, where Edward McNally was foreman. He is forty years old. Last Sunday the twp eloped, the young girl leaving a letter to her father in which she said: “Ed and I dave been married two months and are now going to be happy. You must not try to find me. If you do I will see Senator Luke Keenan and Leader Peter Howitt and bave you transferred.”” ‘As these politicians are men of great influence, the father did not take any steps to trace his daughter. She and MoNally went to Kearny, N. J., to live. Last night she returned to her home, at No. %3 Crescent street, and begged forgiveness and asked that McNally be taken in as one of the family. of kissing her and giving her a welcome Mrs, Flynn had her daughter arrested. In court to-day the girl produced a letter signed by the Rev. Dr. Mackilson, pastor of St. Cecelia'’s Church, Kearny, N. J., in which it was said that he had married Frances Flynn and Edward Mc- Nally last Monday, She begged her mother to let her return to McNally, but Mrs. Flyun was not moved by her tears, She inristed that the Magistrate hold the girl and issue a warrant for the arrest of MoNally charging him with abduction. Magistrate Smith said he would, think about the case before giving a decision. OFFICER BOSSE. RELEASED. Ne Bvidence that He Oausel Denth of Patrick Farre Policeman William H. Bosse, of the Classon Avenue Btation, in Brooklyn, who was arrested several days ago charged with causing the death of Patrick Farrell, bartender in a saloon at Myrtle avenue and Raymond street, was discharged to-day oy a writ of habeas corpus by Supreme Court Jus- tice Gaynor. Farrell was found in a dying condi- tlon in the saloon last Sunday, and it was alleged that Bosse, who had been on excise duty, had clubbed him. Bosse was arrested and held for trial by seed Higginbotham on a charge murder in the first degree. He was campaltted on an “information and be- afidavit, although there was no beldence of arly Kind aainer him, His lawyer had him before Justice jaynor on a writ to-day and Justice Gaynor denounced the arrest and com- mitment as an outrage. He sald there Wasn't a acintiila of evidence. against the man and ordered his Instant dis- charge, WHAT BROTHER FRANCIS SAYS ABOUT FATHER JOHN'S. | ther Francis, vs ol, Philip's Home for Industrious ‘Hoye,’ 417” Broome” street York City, tn a letter written June “Hay medien a our Ing given all other 1% tral wit Father fedicine niece conmden he’ teat bronehal welled Mt ebelng the only remedy’ to give me by deel ris Sila mmaend ie ag inert kewise eran fuee is old y Dulas up the body iq atrengt ct un P unvalughte fo onsutn mother and the nelghbors, who quickly | Uom. eats ino ear ea] It your druggist does ‘not have it he can ——————— > Genuine "s Little Liver Pills Police Called to Home of Uncle | Discover Sixteen - Year - Old William Ulrich Lifeless—Had Been Gone a Week, ‘William Ulrich, sixteen years of awe, Who Iived on Metropolitan avenue, Mid- ile Village, L. 1, was found hanging in a stable owned by hs uncle, Ludwig Schmidt, to-da: ‘The doy had been missing for about week and Pollceman Neuseld, of the Newtown force, was summoned to the house to-day and he discovered the lad. 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